7j43kThe hate part might be coming from the people who have to pay for it.
CMStPnPYou have to wonder why the state is managing the project vs a company like BECHTEL or some experienced PM for projects this large.
The 2011 crash barely qualifies, aside from the death toll from equipment falling from a viaduct -- a bit like an Asian Ashtabula Horror. In my opinion a great deal of the subsequent action was political manipulation. It was a rear-end collision at about 60mph, due to a common-mode failure of their PTC and signal systems caused by a lightning strike.
Apparently there was a detailed Chinese accident analysis -- but it would take Mike to find it easily in English. Most recent Amtrak wrecks are more abysmal at lower operational running top speed.
The 2011 crash barely qualifies, aside from the death toll from equipment falling from a viaduct. In my opinion a great deal of the subsequent action was political manipulation. It was a rear-end collision at about 60mph, due to a common-mode failure of their PTC and signal systems caused by a lightning strike.
And the other accident is from running into landslide debris, complicated by the wet-tissue-paper out-of-design-plane structural integrity we saw in the Eschede wreck. If you want true HSR at all (that being over 35mph faster than an Acela's top speed in service) you'll be accepting that kind of damage in such accidents.
charlie hebdoOne collision in 2011 with 40 dead and a derailment in 2021, one dead. Hardly a habit.
Actually, there have been two incidents reported, the latest below. The system is new and not aged for starters. Secondly, I would never place my life in the hands of reporting mechanisms of the Chinese Communist Party as you can read they have attempted to cover up the reasons for crash #1. If it really is crash #1 instead of reported crash #1. I seem to remember the Soviet Communist Party not doing very well with Airliner design or safety.
https://www.cnn.com/2022/06/04/china/china-train-derail-death-intl-hnk/index.html
One of the rather interesting results of the partial investigation of the 2011 crash: "Zhang Shuguang, the deputy chief engineer of China's railways, was also arrested in February 2011 and alleged to have amassed $2.8 billion in overseas accounts." Oh dear.
When I was in the ACI 'structure' in the early 1990s, there was quite a bit of discussion and interest in making concrete bridges and viaducts quicker and less expensive to build. If you don't need a grand structure with heavy guardrails and shoulders, you can make double-track portals to AAR plate K or whatever, erect them as precast units, and arrange deck beams to go on as one fabricated piece with a crane to minimize the actual interruption to traffic. Then build and pave whatever approach ramps and vertical curves as needed to prevent ag equipment from high-centering.
But as MC has noted, the tendency is to spend scads of money to 'future-proof' the crossings. Not all this is highway bubbatizing: every foot of double-stack or trilevel clearance, or equipment rock, costs extra, and then there are allowances for future OHLE electrification... one of the great reasons to consider punctate electrification.
charlie hebdo azrail Of course the Chinese HSR trains have a habit of running into each other. One collision in 2011 with 40 dead and a derailment in 2021, one dead. Hardly a habit.
azrail Of course the Chinese HSR trains have a habit of running into each other.
One collision in 2011 with 40 dead and a derailment in 2021, one dead.
Hardly a habit.
The 2011 crash was a failure in the signal system followed by some poor communication and/or bad choices:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wenzhou_train_collision
Ed
Some time ago, I got interested in how much installing one of those small farm-road overpasses over the tracks costs.
I e-mailed in the question and it took a long time for the answer. Which was "we don't know".
Thing is, that is a discrete project. A stand-alone. And it doesn't involve the tracks at all. So it's kind of hard to argue that it's too "tied in" with other tasks and projects. Two piles of dirt, a bridge, and paving. Doesn't seem too hard.
There really should have been some accounting on that. For example, railroads had AFE's, where a project was described and money allocated. You can still read ones today from a hundred years ago.
Here is a link to California State audits of CHSR:
https://www.bsa.ca.gov/reports/agency/160
And here is a summary of the latest audit, from 2018:
https://www.bsa.ca.gov/reports/2018-108/summary.html
CHSR has a finance and audit committee of its own.
azrailOf course the Chinese HSR trains have a habit of running into each other.
7j43kWhat does California have for that money?
A lot of happy contractors whom I am sure are more than happy to siphon off as much money as they can get away with from a state inexperienced with projects of this size. You have to wonder why the state is managing the project vs a company like BECHTEL or some experienced PM for projects this large. I suspect because the project is also viewed as political candy. And the candyman is in the Central Valley.
mdw Why is this project so hated???
Why is this project so hated???
I think it's more ridiculed than hated. The hate part might be coming from the people who have to pay for it.
For some reason, it's kind of difficult to come up with how much money has been spent so far, but I found it: 10.3 billion.
What does California have for that money? Apparently, a graded right of way, including bridges, from Fresno to Madera (midway between Merced and Fresno), the potential first operating section. That's 23 miles.
These numbers may be incorrect. As I said, there's not a lot of info out there about how much has been spent and how much is completed. For example, CHSR could post a weekly flyover of progress, on their website. Then Californians (and other payers) could see how things were going physically. If someone has more accurate figures, I'd like to see them.
It's been suggested that the whole project might come to 105 billion, approximately 10 times the amount spent so far. That would produce another 207 miles of graded right of way.
azrail Laugh if you will at the Chinese, but they learned how to build far faster HSR infrastructure and equipment... and then actually built out many thousands of route-miles... in far less time than California has spent for its excuse. Of course the Chinese HSR trains have a habit of running into each other.
Laugh if you will at the Chinese, but they learned how to build far faster HSR infrastructure and equipment... and then actually built out many thousands of route-miles... in far less time than California has spent for its excuse.
Of course the Chinese HSR trains have a habit of running into each other.
mdw Quite simply, SNCF proposed the easiest, cheapest (but would still be costly and difficult) solution, which the CHSRA basically HAD to reject because it simply ignored the 3+million people in the Central Valley.
I don't think the problem was running down the Central Valley cities. The problem seemed to be the dogleg thru Palmdale and Mojave.
Overmod... And now they're saying they can't get it running until 2030 or later.
And now they're saying they can't get it running until 2030 or later.
Remember - 2030 is less than eight years away!
Never too old to have a happy childhood!
mdwWhy would cities in the Valley NOT try to lobby to be included in the system? They have the worst connectivity to the rest of the state.
Practical connectivity for the Central Valley would involve nothing 'faster' than 125mph PRIIA with normal grade and bridge civil between those cities, with cross-platform connections to the true Central Valley HSR line at points suitable to the latter's practical operation for actual time reduction between stops. Instead everyone wants their own way station to justify all the Chinese-wall ROW and noise that goes with any high-speed railroad that 'goes through for someone else's benefit'. And HSR simply doesn't work that way.
Meanwhile the actual shortening of travel time between LA and SF is... not particularly achieved. In terms of political inclusion, this -- which was one of the major points in building HSR at all -- falls by the wayside.
We had a similar issue in Memphis concerning the airport light-rail line. What was needed was a quick way to get passengers to planes, a way quicker than express buses to the adjacent 'transit center' and then shuttle buses to the terminals. What wound up being 'politically expedient' was a trolley for airport workers, expensively built down several main streets, offering an over-40-minute ride, with grades and curves and no luggage-handling ability, at a putative cost of over $4 billion.
So far.
My understanding is the French Proposal was to get a system up and operating fast at least cost and to add the Central Valley later vs right up front to lower the complexity of the design and the mileage of the design. I could be wrong of course but that was my understanding of what they proposed.
I think they proposed similarly in Texas with the Texas TGV proposal?
The main issue I see with the current California proposal is the state will not see the complete system up and operating between two significant points for some time and the voters will continually be asked to punk billons upon billions down a hole that keeps getting larger with not much to show for the expenditure.
D.CarletonHow bad must California be that even the French can't stand it?
Lol.......suck de bleua!
This article is so agrivating. The author has had a vendetta against this project for over 12 years. He was fired from the LA Times and how he got this article to the NY Times is hard to fathom. It simply drags out all of the old tropes against the project on long settled issues. Quite simply, SNCF proposed the easiest, cheapest (but would still be costly and difficult) solution, which the CHSRA basically HAD to reject because it simply ignored the 3+million people in the Central Valley. Politically there was no option but to reject this proposal. Yes, it was politically decided but a project of this huge scope cannot avoid the entry of politics, and the CHSRA was bound by the establishing legislation to chose a route/system to connect ALL of the state, not just LA to the Bay Area.
Why would cities in the Valley NOT try to lobby to be included in the system? They have the worst connectivity to the rest of the state.
Many moons ago I happened to have an exceptionally enlightening conversation with someone in a restaurant on Mott Street in Manhattan. He was ethnically Chinese but lived in Paris and worked as a translator for their court system. After telling me some experiences he related how, after telling his native Chinese parents the same, they declared that France was more corrupt than China. The takeaway: How bad must California be that even the French can't stand it?
Editor Emeritus, This Week at Amtrak
Yet another highly critical article:
https://www.yahoo.com/news/californias-bullet-train-went-off-182254798.html
Which I suspected from the ballooning costs and very expensive design. Would be interesting to know all the comments from the French.
https://www.yahoo.com/news/company-hoping-help-california-high-015211264.html
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